When my best friend Bonnie was diagnosed with ovarian cancer
about 5 years ago, she was the closest friend I had who had cancer. Since then,
other friends have been diagnosed and some have died; Bonnie died in October
(peacefully, at home). One of the things Bonnie did way back when was find
support groups for women with cancer. Maybe it’s a holdover from the
consciousness-raising groups of the 1970s, but it’s practically a reflex:
whatever is going on in your life, you grab a bunch of women to talk it
through. Do men do this, too? If so, it’s a secret from me.
It turned out that a cluster of women who were at college
with us at the same time and who still lived in the area wandered through these
groups at one time or another, or were otherwise associated with this
community. Some have also died, some aren’t doing too well the last I heard,
and some are thriving. One of these is my friend Constance Emerson Crooker.
Connie and I weren’t close in college, but it was a small
school and everybody pretty much knew one another in passing. She wasn’t an
avid folk dancer or a Biology major like me, but she and Bonnie stayed in touch
so I’d hear about her from time to time. Connie was one of those who stepped up
to the plate in Bonnie’s final weeks, and I was not only grateful for the extra
and very competent pair of hands but for the chance to get to know her better.